182
C
HAPTER
10: V
IRTUAL
LAN
S
(VLAN
S
)
Origin
For all Layer 2 Switching Modules, the VLAN origin is
always
static
, which indicates that the VLAN was
created by the user. For Multilayer Switching Modules,
the origin indicates one of the following:
■
static
— The VLAN was created statically
(user-configured by using the
bridge vlan
define
command).
■
router
— The VLAN was created automatically by
the router port IP interface (of router origin). You
create a router port IP interface using the
ip
interface define
command with the interface
type
port
. You cannot modify or remove a router
port VLAN.
■
GVRP
— The VLAN was created dynamically from a
GVRP update (
GVRP
). You must enable the GVRP
state for the entire module as a bridge-wide
parameter
and
for the participating bridge ports as a
bridge-port parameter.
Ports/Port
Index numbers of the bridge ports that belong to each
VLAN. In the second part of the detail display, the Port
column lists the ports for the VLAN individually and
indicates ports that are trunked or have tagging.
The list of ports includes the front-panel ports and the
appropriate backplane ports.
Protocol
(Multilayer Switching
Modules only)
Protocol suites for the VLAN. VLANs that are associated
with router port IP interfaces always have IP as the
protocol type. The default VLAN always uses the
protocol type
unspecified
.
rxBcastBytes
(Multilayer Switching
Modules only)
Number of received broadcast bytes
rxBcastFrames
(Multilayer Switching
Modules only)
Number of received broadcast frames
rxMcastBytes
(Multilayer Switching
Modules only)
Number of received multicast bytes
rxMcastFrames
(Multilayer Switching
Modules only)
Number of received multicast frames
rxUcastBytes
(Multilayer Switching
Modules only)
Number of received unicast bytes
Field
Description
Summary of Contents for 4007
Page 1: ...http www 3com com Switch 4007 Command Reference Guide Part No 10013693 Published May 2000...
Page 14: ......
Page 22: ...22 ABOUT THIS GUIDE...
Page 34: ...34 CHAPTER 1 ADMINISTRATION OVERVIEW...
Page 78: ...78 CHAPTER 4 SIMPLE NETWORK MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL SNMP...
Page 100: ...100 CHAPTER 5 ETHERNET PORTS...
Page 174: ...174 CHAPTER 9 RESILIENT LINKS...
Page 322: ...322 CHAPTER 13 VIRTUAL ROUTER REDUNDANCY VRRP...
Page 476: ...476 CHAPTER 16 INTERNET PACKET EXCHANGE IPX...
Page 552: ...552 CHAPTER 18 QUALITY OF SERVICE QOS AND RESOURCE RESERVATION PROTOCOL RSVP...
Page 566: ...566 APPENDIX A TECHNICAL SUPPORT...